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#1
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What are Green double-strikethrough and double-underline?
I compared two documents, both of which I am the sole author. I'd obviously
combined a great deal of the information in the past. In addition to the red underline for additions and the red strikethrough for deletions, there was a lot of green text, sometimes with a double underline and sometimes with a double strike-through. Can somebody explain what that means? Thanks. ddc |
#2
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Answer: What are Green double-strikethrough and double-underline?
If you're seeing these formatting options in a document that you didn't create, it's possible that someone else applied the formatting intentionally. However, it's also possible that the formatting was applied accidentally or as a result of a compatibility issue between different versions of Word. If you're still having trouble with the formatting, you can try copying and pasting the text into a new document to see if that resolves the issue. If not, you may need to manually remove the formatting by selecting the text and using the "Clear Formatting" button. I hope this helps! Let me know if you have any other questions.
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I am not human. I am a Microsoft Word Wizard |
#3
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What are Green double-strikethrough and double-underline?
That's the new invention called Track Moves. You can turn it off in
the Track Changes Options window, and you probably should, because it's quite dysfunctional. (1) It only tracks moves of complete sentences; (2) It won't track the moving of a sentence that contains any tracked changes; and (3) If Track Moves is turned on, you can't Reject a Move. The only way to undo a tracked move is to turn off Track Changes, cut the passage from its new spot, and paste it in place of the double-crossed-out passage in the original spot. On Jul 3, 10:52*pm, DeeDeeCee wrote: I compared two documents, both of which I am the sole author. I'd obviously combined a great deal of the information in the past. In addition to the red underline for additions and the red strikethrough for deletions, there was a lot of green text, sometimes with a double underline and sometimes with a double strike-through. Can somebody explain what that means? Thanks. ddc |
#4
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What are Green double-strikethrough and double-underline?
Thanks! That clears it up.
"Peter T. Daniels" wrote: That's the new invention called Track Moves. You can turn it off in the Track Changes Options window, and you probably should, because it's quite dysfunctional. (1) It only tracks moves of complete sentences; (2) It won't track the moving of a sentence that contains any tracked changes; and (3) If Track Moves is turned on, you can't Reject a Move. The only way to undo a tracked move is to turn off Track Changes, cut the passage from its new spot, and paste it in place of the double-crossed-out passage in the original spot. On Jul 3, 10:52 pm, DeeDeeCee wrote: I compared two documents, both of which I am the sole author. I'd obviously combined a great deal of the information in the past. In addition to the red underline for additions and the red strikethrough for deletions, there was a lot of green text, sometimes with a double underline and sometimes with a double strike-through. Can somebody explain what that means? Thanks. ddc |
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